Furniture Row Racing

[1] Furniture Row Racing made its NASCAR debut in the Busch Series at Nashville Superspeedway in 2005 with Jerry Robertson driving, starting 24th and finishing 33rd.

In early 2008, Wallace returned to Furniture Row to drive in the Daytona 500 in a car that was supposed to serve as a safety net for Nemechek in case his team didn't make the field.

Instead, Nemechek locked himself into the field with a third place qualifying run, and Wallace secured a spot in the race in the Gatorade Duels.

On August 7, 2016, Furniture Row Racing announced that Erik Jones would compete full-time in the Cup Series with backing from 5 Hour Energy.

In the Coca-Cola 600, Jones had a career best finish in 7th place, but Austin Dillon would go onto win the race.

On July 11, it was announced that Jones would leave the team after the 2017 season for his long anticipated move to the JGR No.

After Scott Wimmer and Sterling Marlin failed to qualify in the following weeks, Joe Nemechek was named the permanent driver.

For 2009, the team announced it would cut back to a part-time schedule due to financial constraints.

Nemechek was to remain as the driver, but the team bought out the rest of his contract after he refused to run a partial schedule.

On November 15, 2010, the Furniture Row Racing transporter and motorcoach were destroyed in an accident on Interstate 25 about forty miles from the team's Denver headquarters.

Richard Childress Racing provided the team a fully equipped transporter for Furniture Row's use at Homestead.

[4] At the 2011 Daytona 500, Smith gave Furniture Row its first top ten, with a seventh-place finish.

On May 7, 2011, Smith gave Furniture Row its first top five finish, and first victory, at Darlington Raceway in the Southern 500, holding off Carl Edwards.

[5] In the 2013 season, Busch improved the status of Furniture Row as a team, with the car becoming more competitive and running in contention more frequently than not.

The team also had low points, such as a scary wreck in the May race at Talladega that saw Busch flip over and land on top of Ryan Newman in turn 3 with six laps to go.

A number of poor finishes, and errors like crashes at New Hampshire and Martinsville, plus a dead battery while leading under a red flag at the Coca-Cola 600, kept the team hovering on the Chase bubble.

[6] In August 2013, it was announced that Busch would not be returning to FRR for 2014, as he had signed with Gene Haas to drive with Stewart-Haas Racing starting at the 2014 Daytona 500.

Prior to the November race at Texas, it was announced and confirmed that Truex had signed a multi-year deal to drive for FRR beginning at the 2014 Daytona 500.

[citation needed] The team's performance declined slightly in 2014, with Truex scoring only five top tens, leading only one lap and finishing 24th in the standings.

He led the most laps at Kansas and appeared on his way to a win, when a poor pit stop shuffled him to a ninth-place finish.

[10] Truex would win his second race with Furniture Row on May 29, 2016 after leading a record-breaking 392 of 400 laps of the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte.

At the Coca-Cola 600, Truex dominated, leading 273 laps while Erik Jones had a career best finish in seventh place, but Austin Dillon eventually won the race.

78 team won the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series at Homestead after leading a fitting 78 laps.

For the next few weeks, he picked up top five finishes in five straight races, including two poles, and a win at California.

Wallace's 2008 No. 87 car at Daytona
Erik Jones driving the FRR No. 77 car at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2017.
Joe Nemechek in the No. 78 at Daytona in 2008.
Regan Smith in the No. 78 at Pocono Raceway in 2011
Kurt Busch at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in 2013
Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 78 at Sonoma Raceway in 2014
Martin Truex Jr. scored the team's second win and second Chase berth in 2015.
Truex's No. 78 car during the 2017 Toyota Owners 400
Truex's No. 78 during the team's final race at Homestead–Miami Speedway in 2018